No. I am talking about price. Price measures what you are giving up to receive value.
> price is definitely set before the transaction takes place.
No. You're likely thinking of an offer. Offers are made before the transaction takes place. Offers are spoken of in terms of the price the seller (or buyer) hopes to see, but it is not yet set. Negotiation can still occur at this stage, as can rejection.
Vendors with a lot of traffic are able to gain a pretty good handle on what consumers are willing to pay, so often, for all intents and purposes, the first offer and price end up being equivalent. Perhaps that is what you are thinking of?
Regardless, CPI looks at what consumers are actually buying. No matter how you want to define price in some sort of vacuum, price with respect to CPI can only increase if the buyers are willing.
> No. I am talking about price. Price measures what you are giving up to receive value.
but you said "Price is not determined until a voluntary transition takes place"
so does it happen before or after the "transition" takes place? id say price is set before, market value is what actually someone paid for it and comes after
> so does it happen before or after the "transition" takes place?
As the quote you offered says, it is measured after. I suppose theoretically in some kind of bending of space and time it could be measured during the exact instant it is created, but as we return back to reality... It certainly cannot be measured before. One cannot measure that which does not exist.
> market value is what actually someone paid for it and comes after
Value is, let's say, intrinsic. Whereas price is the measurement of it. To use an analogy, it is like the difference between distance and length.
> id say price is set before
While you are certainly welcome to make up any old random definition on the spot, given that we're talking about price within the context of CPI we know it is not "set before". CPI measurement is taken in hindsight, after consumers have already made their purchases. The values it gathers are post-sale.
again, the US cpi concept of price is the same as the UK one. They look at price, not transaction value you absolute numbnuts. what was all this crap about price in respect to CPI again? or were you thinking something different to what you said again?
Quote from https://www.bls.gov/cpi/questions-and-answers.htm
BLS data collectors visit (in person, on the web, or using apps) or call thousands of retail stores, service establishments, rental units, and doctors' offices, all over the United States to obtain information on the prices of the thousands of items used to track and measure price changes in the CPI. We record the prices of about 80,000 items each month, representing a scientifically selected sample of the prices paid by consumers for goods and services purchased.
During each call or visit, the data collector collects price data on a specific good or service that was precisely defined during an earlier visit. If the selected item is no longer available, or if there have been changes in the quality or quantity (for example, a 64-ounce container has been replaced by a 59-ounce container) of the good or service since the last time prices were collected, a new item is selected or the quality change in the current item is recorded.
> representing a scientifically selected sample of the prices paid by consumers for goods and services purchased.
Exactly. Goods and services purchased — not goods and services left unsold because the seller wanted more than buyers were willing to pay. You cannot measure that which does not exist.
Nope. Your misinterpretation may have lead to you to believe that, but intent supersedes interpretation. Which you no doubt understand given that you came back to ask for clarification given the apparent discrepancy. That would have been completely pointless otherwise.
> notice you didnt say gave, you said giving. There is a price before the "transaction"
I'm pretty sure it said "transition", not "transaction". Regardless, while it is thoughtful of you to point out what lead to your misinterpretation, we already cleared this up in a previous comment. What are you trying to add here?
> Market Value is determined in this offer/sell kind of fashion precisely because it ISNT intrinsic.
The value was always there. We just don't know what it is until we create an environment that allows us to measure it.
> If you swap price with market value
You'll have to talk to the government agencies. I don't pick the terminology used around CPI. I am not sure where you got the idea that it is up to me? And I'm especially unsure of why you'd want it to be up to me given that you recognize that I am not the clearest of communicators.
No. I am talking about price. Price measures what you are giving up to receive value.
> price is definitely set before the transaction takes place.
No. You're likely thinking of an offer. Offers are made before the transaction takes place. Offers are spoken of in terms of the price the seller (or buyer) hopes to see, but it is not yet set. Negotiation can still occur at this stage, as can rejection.
Vendors with a lot of traffic are able to gain a pretty good handle on what consumers are willing to pay, so often, for all intents and purposes, the first offer and price end up being equivalent. Perhaps that is what you are thinking of?
Regardless, CPI looks at what consumers are actually buying. No matter how you want to define price in some sort of vacuum, price with respect to CPI can only increase if the buyers are willing.